A composition comprising an engineered defect concentration comprises a metal oxide single crystal having a polar surface and a bulk concentration of interstitial oxygen (Oi) of at least about 1014 atoms/cm3. The polar surface comprises a concentration of impurity species of about 5% or less of a monolayer. A method of engineering a defect concentration in a single crystal comprises exposing a metal oxide single crystal having a polar surface to molecular oxygen at a temperature of about 850° C. or less, and injecting atomic oxygen into the single crystal at an effective diffusion rate Deff of at least about 10−16 cm2/s.
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1. A composition comprising an engineered defect concentration, the composition comprising:
a metal oxide single crystal comprising a polar surface and having a bulk concentration of interstitial oxygen (Oi) of at least about 1014 atoms/cm3,
wherein the polar surface comprises a concentration of impurity species of about 5% or less of a monolayer.
2. The composition of
3. The composition of
6. The composition of
7. The composition of
8. The composition of
10. The functional device of
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The present patent document claims the benefit of priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/154,314, filed on Apr. 29, 2015, and hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
This invention was made with government support under contract number DMR1306822 awarded by the National Science Foundation. The U.S. government has certain rights in this invention.
The present disclosure is related generally to defect engineering and more specifically to controlling the species, concentration and/or spatial distribution of defects in metal oxides.
As a semiconductor, zinc oxide (ZnO) has a wide band gap (about 3.4 eV) and has attracted attention because of its potential applications in catalysis, as well as in optoelectronic devices, lasers, field effect transistors, and photovoltaic solar cells. The large-scale adoption of ZnO for these and other industrial applications hinges on obtaining atomic-scale control of surface and interface structure. It is known that the concentration and spatial distribution of point defects (e.g., vacancies, interstitial atoms and/or defect complexes) can strongly influence the manufacture and performance of ZnO and other metal oxides in various applications. For example, ZnO, which is an intrinsically O-deficient metal oxide, may contain large concentrations of oxygen vacancies (Vo) that are introduced during growth or post-growth treatments. Oxygen vacancies are undesirable in many photonic and electronic applications where they act as recombination centers, lowering UV band edge emissions and photocatalytic efficiencies, and contribute to charge compensation, hindering p-type doping in natively n-type oxides. Thus, methods to control oxygen vacancy concentration and distribution could be advantageous.
A composition comprising an engineered defect concentration comprises a metal oxide single crystal having a polar surface and a bulk concentration of interstitial oxygen (Oi) of at least about 1014 atoms/cm3. The polar surface comprises a concentration of impurity species of about 5% or less of a monolayer.
A method of engineering a defect concentration in a single crystal comprises exposing a metal oxide single crystal having a polar surface to molecular oxygen at a temperature of about 850° C. or less, and injecting atomic oxygen into the single crystal at an effective diffusion rate Deff of at least about 10−16 cm2/s.
The adsorption and ensuing dissociation of O2 onto polar metal oxide surfaces, followed by the injection of surface O adatoms into the interior of the metal oxide crystal, has been found to be a key approach for defect engineering to obtain compositional control over the near-surface region of metal oxides such as zinc oxide (ZnO). Thus, a method of engineering a defect concentration in a metal oxide single crystal is set forth herein. Also presented is a composition comprising an engineered defect concentration, as well as functional devices that may include such a composition.
A composition having an engineered defect concentration comprises a metal oxide single crystal having a polar surface and a bulk concentration of interstitial oxygen (Oi) of at least about 1014 atoms/cm3. The polar surface is atomically clean and has a concentration of impurity species of about 5% or less of a monolayer (about 0.05 ML or less) or about 1% or less of a monolayer (about 0.01 ML or less). It should be understood that the concentration of impurity species being referred to is a surface concentration as opposed to a bulk concentration, which is why the impurity species concentration is described in terms of a percentage of a monolayer.
As used herein, a polar surface is one that comprises excess surface charge due to the presence of a plane of metal cations or oxygen anions having a lower coordination than in the bulk. The metal oxide single crystal may have a wurtzite, zincblende, rocksalt, perovskite, trigonal, cubic spinel, or other crystallographic lattice structure that is geometrically capable of yielding a polar surface. The polar surface may be attained by cutting or cleaving the single crystal between alternating planes of cations and anions.
Polar surfaces are electrostatically driven toward stabilization. In the present work, the adsorption of molecular oxygen (O2) is exploited to stabilize polar surfaces. In an oxygen-rich environment at suitable temperatures, molecular oxygen may be adsorbed onto a polar surface and can dissociate into injectable O adatoms, as shown schematically in
The interstitial oxygen may be isolated and/or may form complexes with other mobile defects. For example, Oi may form a complex with interstitial M or M vacancies, where M is taken to represent the metal(s) present in the metal oxide. In one example, the metal oxide single crystal may comprise zinc oxide (ZnO), where Zn is M, and where the crystal comprises a zincblende or wurtzite structure. In other examples, the metal oxide single crystal may comprise NiO (e.g., having the rock salt crystal structure), lithium cobaltite LiCoO2 (e.g., having a trigonal or cubic spinel crystal structure) or a perovskite such as KTaO3 or SrTiO3.
ZnO is an ionic material that most commonly has a hexagonal wurtzite structure, as illustrated in
The excess surface charge characteristic of a polar surface can be removed to stabilize the surface by oxygen adsorption, as described here, and/or by reconstruction, faceting or surface vacancy formation. For example, considerations of electron counting rules show that formation of 0.25 monolayer (ML) neutral VZn (as illustrated schematically in
Quantum calculations indicate that oxygen plays a role in stabilizing a polar surface, not only by direct participation in fulfilling electron counting rules as described above, but also indirectly, where O2 in the gas phase provides a thermodynamic environment whose chemical potential favors surface reconstructions having geometries amenable to O or O2 adsorption. The details of this indirect thermodynamic effect may vary from material to material and also among crystallographic orientations of a given material. The quantum calculations also demonstrate that O or O2 can in fact—and not just in principle—adsorb on the polar surface.
Isotopic oxygen self-diffusion experiments confirm the creation of a mobile oxygen defect, which is believed to be interstitial oxygen, at the polar surfaces of ZnO, (0001) and (000
The diffusion experiments reveal that extremely high values of diffusivity Deff may be achieved for mobile oxygen defects in the metal oxide single crystal due in significant part to the polarity and low impurity levels of the exposed crystal surfaces. The polarity drives the need for stabilization, which may be achieved through oxygen adsorption as explained above, and the surface cleanliness ensures that surface binding sites (or surface active sites) are available to accommodate the adsorbed oxygen. At a given temperature, the diffusion rate depends not only on the mobility of the defect but also on the number of defects. The rate of defect exchanges that occur at a given temperature is dependent on defect formation and annihilation at the surface, which in turn is influenced by the availability of surface active sites. As indicated above, the polar surface is atomically clean with a concentration of impurity species that may be 0.01 ML or less. In some cases, the concentration of impurity species may be about 0.005 ML or less, or as low as about 0.001 ML (about 0.1% of a monolayer). One way to achieve this level of surface cleanliness is to carry out the diffusion experiments in a high vacuum or an ultrahigh vacuum environment (e.g., background pressure of 1×10−8 Torr or better for reactive gases), as described further below.
Diffusion experiments carried out on single crystal ZnO with low levels of adsorbed sulfur on the Zn-terminated (0001) surface show the impact of surface impurity levels on the diffusion rate of O interstitials. Referring to
The high values measured for oxygen diffusivity Deff are consistent with high concentrations of interstitial oxygen. When exposed to oxygen-rich conditions at relatively low temperatures, e.g., below 850° C., a ZnO single crystal may exhibit a diffusivity Deff of at least about 10−16 cm2/s, at least about 10−15 cm2/s, at least about 10−14 cm2/s, at least about 10−13 cm2/s, or at least about 10−12 cm2/s. The temperature to which the polar surface is exposed may be about 800° C. or less, about 750° C. or less, or about 700° C. or less, and the diffusivity Deff may be as high as about 10−11 cm2/s or as high as about 10−10 cm2/s. These values are up to six orders of magnitude higher than oxygen defect diffusivities obtained from ZnO samples in the prior art. As will be discussed in further detail, the magnitude of the diffusivity may depend on the temperature and the surface polarity (e.g., whether the surface is cation- or anion-terminated). Typically, the temperature is at least about 300° C., or at least about 500° C., to achieve the desired diffusion rate.
A striking difference between the diffusion profiles of the Zn-terminated and O-terminated samples is in their temperature dependence. Profile shifts with temperature are observed for the Zn-terminated surface (as can be seen in
The yellowish tinge of ZnO crystals before or after annealing may be attributed to oxygen vacancies. The more saturated the yellowish hue, the larger the concentration of VO. The loss of the yellowish tinge upon annealing can be directly related to the annihilation of oxygen vacancies via adsorption of molecular oxygen followed by dissociation and injection of Oi. In oxides, Oi spontaneously recombines with VO. The O-terminated samples show less pronounced color loss which is believe to be related to a smaller amount of mobile oxygen defect injection into the bulk from the (000
The diffusion profiles have two distinct regimes: (1) a near-surface region (˜5-35 nm) showing accumulation (or pile-up) of isotopic oxygen, and (2) deeper profile extensions into the bulk. The amount of near-surface pile-up is found to increase with temperature for the Zn-terminated surface but remains almost constant with temperature for the O-terminated surface. The pile-up may have an electrostatic origin, as discussed further below. Unlike oxygen self-diffusion in rutile TiO2, which was investigated in U.S. Pat. No. 8,871,670 (issued Oct. 28, 2014 to Seebauer and hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety), the diffusion tails in ZnO are more gradually sloping, which indicates that the mean diffusion lengths are on the order of a few microns.
The bulk diffusion profiles exhibit exponential tails, which manifest as straight lines on the semilogarithmic scale of
In addition, optical photoluminescence data show how defect concentrations can be controlled as a function of process conditions. Referring to
For the annealed (Oi-injected) sample that is colorless, there are two peaks in addition to the band-gap peak at 3.33 eV; one of the peaks is at 2.5 eV or 480 nm (labeled as “Feature 2”), and the other is at 3.1 eV or 400 nm (labeled as “Feature 3”). The peak at 2.5 eV (480 nm) may be attributed to residual lithium contamination that is common in ZnO crystals. Feature 3 at 3.1 eV (400 nm) is believed to be an entirely new peak that may be due interstitial defects. The scientific literature identifies a Zn interstitial energy level that is 0.22 eV below the conduction band, which could lead to such emission.
Based on the findings described herein, a method of engineering a defect concentration in a metal oxide single crystal is described. The method entails exposing a single crystal comprising a polar surface to molecular oxygen at a temperature of about 850° C. or less, and injecting atomic oxygen into the single crystal as interstitial oxygen at an effective diffusion rate or diffusivity Deff of at least about 10−14 cm2/s. As described above, injecting atomic oxygen into the single crystal may comprise adsorbing a portion of the molecular oxygen onto the polar surface, and the molecular oxygen on the polar surface may then dissociate to form the atomic oxygen. As shown schematically in
The diffusion data establish that extremely high diffusion rates may be attained for the mobile oxygen species. The effective oxygen diffusivity Deff may be at least about 10−16 cm2/s, at least about 10−15 cm2/s, at least about 10−14 cm2/s, at least about 10−13 cm2/s, or at least about 10−12 cm2/s, and Deff may be as high as about 10−11 cm2/s or as high as about 10−10 cm2/s. In some cases, the temperature to which the polar surface is exposed may be about 800° C. or less, about 750° C. or less, or about 700° C. or less. Typically, the temperature is at least about 300° C., or at least about 500° C. The metal oxide single crystal may be exposed to the molecular oxygen at an oxygen pressure (PO2) in the range of 10−7 Torr to 760 Torr (atmospheric pressure). In some cases, the oxygen pressure may be in the range of 10−6 Torr to 10−2 Torr, or from 10−5 to 10−4 Torr. The exposure to the molecular oxygen may occur for a time duration of from about 1 minute to about 120 minutes, or from about 10 minutes to about 90 minutes.
To promote surface cleanliness, the method may be carried out in a high vacuum or an ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) environment (e.g., a sealed vacuum chamber under active pumping by one or more pumps, such as turbomolecular pumps, ion pumps and/or cryopumps). Thus, prior to introduction of the molecular oxygen, a base or background pressure of reactive gases of 5×10−8 Torr or lower may be achieved in the environment. In some cases, the background pressure may be about 1×10−8 Torr or lower. The metal oxide single crystal may be loaded into the ultrahigh vacuum environment for some time duration (e.g., at least 8 hours) prior to the exposure to molecular oxygen. Accordingly, the polar surface may be atomically clean and have a concentration of impurity species of about 5% or less of a monolayer (0.05 ML or less). As described above, the concentration of impurity species may also be 0.01 ML or less, and in some cases the concentration of impurity species may be about 0.005 ML or less, or as low as about 0.001 ML (about 0.1% of a monolayer). The metal oxide single crystal may be zinc oxide or another oxide having any of the characteristics described above. The polar surface may be cation-terminated or anion-terminated.
It has been found that the net injection flux of the mobile oxygen defects is highly sensitive to the polar surface orientation, that is, whether the polar surface is cation-terminated or anion-terminated. In the examples discussed herein with ZnO polar surfaces, it is found that O2 adsorbs most readily on the Zn-terminated polar surface, and under some conditions on the O-terminated polar surface. In contrast, O2 adsorption does not occur readily at all on nonpolar surfaces. Referring to the data of
To quantify the defect injection flux (F; shown in
where Cs is the measured concentration of 18O, CS0 is the natural abundance concentration of 18O (8.5×1019 cm−3) in the crystal, CTS0 denotes the total concentration of the lattice sites (4.1×1022 cm−3) capable of exhanging with the mobile defect, t is the diffusion time and x is the spatial coordinate with x=0 referring to the surface. Eq. (1) applies in the short-time limit when kick-out of 18O from the lattice site is negligible. Fitting Eq. (1) to measured exponential diffusion profiles yields the value of λ from the slope of the straight line and F from the y-axis intercept. The effective diffusivity (Deff) can then be calculated from F and λ as:
While F depends upon conditions at the surface, λ depends upon only bulk parameters.
The present experiments yield an activation energy of 1.92±0.46 eV for the Zn-terminated surface. The measured pre-exponential factor of 10−1.34±2.60 cm2/s combined with the lower activation energy results in oxygen self-diffusivities that are six or more orders of magnitude larger than those reported in the literature below 850° C., with the difference narrowing somewhat at higher temperatures. As noted above, the substantially larger diffusivities are an indication that a highly mobile O defect, such as interstitial O, mediates O diffusion. The O-terminated (000
The data for Deff can be used to obtain values of interstitial oxygen concentration [Oi] by the procedure described below. The following material properties are used in the equations, assuming the metal oxide single crystal is ZnO having a hexagonal (zincite) structure: Density=5.61 g/cm3, formula weight=81.41 g/mol, where the density of O atoms in the lattice [Olattice] is 4.15×1022 cm−3. The melting temperature Tmelt is 2250 K, and the heat of fusion ΔHmelt is 230 J/g=0.194 eV.
The interstitial oxygen concentration [Oi] may be determined as follows from the effective diffusivity Deff. At equilibrium, Deff=Dhop×[Oi]/[Olattice], as discussed in C. Zener, J. Appl. Phys., 22 (1951) 372. Deff may be determined from the data of
On this basis, depending on the temperature and value of Deff, the interstitial oxygen concentration [Oi] can be calculated to be in the range of about 1014 atoms/cm3 to 1017 atoms/cm3. For example, [Oi] may be at least about 1×1014 atoms/cm3, at least about 3×1014 atoms/cm3, at least about 1×1015 atoms/cm3, or at least about 1×1016 atoms/cm3. [Oi] may also be up to about 1×1017 atoms/cm3 or up to about 3×1017 atoms/cm3.
The distribution of oxygen defects and dopants near surfaces (and interfaces) of oxide semiconductors can influence the efficiency of solar cells, sensors and other devices. In nanostructured materials, the bulk lies close to the surface, typically within a few tens of nanometers to a few hundreds of nanometers. At small length scales, the high surface to volume ratios may result in a strong surface to bulk coupling. It should be noted that the metal oxide single crystal may have at least one linear dimension of about 100 nm or less and may thus be described as nanostructured. A single crystal having one linear dimension of about 100 nm or less may be described as a thin film; a single crystal having two linear dimensions of about 100 nm or less may be described as a nanorod, nanowire or nanotube; and a single crystal having three linear dimensions of about 100 nm or less may be described as a nanoparticle. It is also contemplated that the metal oxide single crystal may include a dopant. For example, zinc oxide may be doped with an element such as Al, As, Fe, Ga, Mg, N, P, Sb and/or Y. The dopant may be introduced to the metal oxide single crystal before or after the mobile oxygen defects are injected.
The surface to bulk coupling referred to above may have an electrostatic origin where charged bulk defects interact with electric fields in the space charge layers near the semiconductor surface.
Various types of functional devices may be formed using a metal oxide single crystal having any of the physical and/or chemical characteristics described in this disclosure.
For example, the functional device may be a light emitting diode. The functional device may include a substrate in contact with the metal oxide single crystal, and one of the metal oxide single crystal and the substrate may be p-type, and the other may be n-type. In other words, the substrate may be p-type and the metal oxide single crystal may be n-type, or the substrate may be n-type and the metal oxide single crystal may be p-type. For example, a thin film or other nanostructure, such as a nanorod or nanotube, may comprise an n-type ZnO single crystal, and the p-type substrate may comprise a nitride semiconductor or a polymer. ZnO emits over a broad range of visible wavelengths, corresponding to a large number of different point defect states. O interstitials may be responsible for emission at yellow and orange wavelengths, and thus strong Oi injection may produce increases in the yellow and orange emission lines under ultraviolet illumination. Strong Oi injection may also affect the concentrations of other defects, and thus injecting Oi at high rates may cause changes in the spectral shape of optical emission under ultraviolet illumination. Anion substitution for O in ZnO may hold promise for obtaining p-type ZnO, which could be important for producing full-color and pure-white LEDs.
In a second example, the functional device may be a display panel (e.g., liquid crystal display or plasma display panel) that may be used for computer and/or televisions screens. The display panel may comprise a stack of layers include a light emitting layer and a transparent electrode layer comprising the metal oxide single crystal. Currently, indium-tin oxide (ITO) is widely used as a transparent electrode in such devices; however, it would be beneficial to find alternatives given the limited availability of indium, as well as the desire for achieving higher conductivity at the same transparency level. Eliminating O vacancies by Oi injection may improve the electron mobility in doped ZnO, thereby increasing its electrical conductivity and suitability for display applications. With respect to pure undoped ZnO, there is some disagreement about which defects are responsible for electrical conductivity. Leading candidates are Zn vacancies, Zn interstitials, and H as an unintentional impurity. It is surmised that the injection of Oi at high rates to increase the concentration of interstitial oxygen may lead to increases in the electrical conductivity of undoped ZnO also.
In a third example, the functional device may be a solar cell. The functional device may comprise a stack of layers including a photoactive layer and a transparent electrode layer comprising the metal oxide single crystal. Highly-doped ZnO films have been shown to be useful in amorphous silicon and Cu(In,Ga)(S,Se)2 solar cells.
In a fourth example, the functional device may be gas sensor formed by a nanorod comprising the metal oxide single crystal and having a first end connected to a first electrode and a second end connected to a second electrode. The ZnO gas sensor may be used to detect the presence of certain molecular species by exhibiting a change in electrical conductivity or another property. For example, electrical current may be passed through the nanorod when in the presence of a gas sample, and changes in the electrical conductivity may be measured.
Wurtzite ZnO O-terminated (000
Oxygen diffusion rates were measured by exposing the ZnO samples to isotopically labeled oxygen gas at elevated temperatures. The wurtzite ZnO single crystals having a polar surface ((0001) or (000
Diffused 18O profiles were measured ex-situ with a PHI-TRIFT III time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) using a cesium ion beam. To avoid strong mass interferences from water and hydroxyl-related radicals that have atomic masses similar to 18O the ZnO samples were loaded in the SIMS chamber at least 8 hr prior to the profile measurements. This ensured enough time for the base or background pressure in the SIMS chamber to drop below 5×10−8 torr, at which point mass interferences seemed to become negligible. Multiple measurements were made for each sample to rule out lateral variations in the diffusion profiles.
Although the present invention has been described in considerable detail with reference to certain embodiments thereof, other embodiments are possible without departing from the present invention. The spirit and scope of the appended claims should not be limited, therefore, to the description of the preferred embodiments contained herein. All embodiments that come within the meaning of the claims, either literally or by equivalence, are intended to be embraced therein.
Furthermore, the advantages described above are not necessarily the only advantages of the invention, and it is not necessarily expected that all of the described advantages will be achieved with every embodiment of the invention.
Seebauer, Edmund G., Gorai, Prashun
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